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Essays

September in Japan

(Originally posted on October 3, 2010) I was in Japan during the most of September.  It was nice to be back in Japan for a while— seeing familiar faces and having some Japanese goodies were priceless.  But some would wonder (well, I did) why I wanted to go to Japan when not going to Japan might have been a smarter choice from a couple of standpoints; one: I just went through a financial hardship after my wrist fracture and I would need to save the money I just earned during summer; and two: I’m preparing for my first qualifying exam and I should be studying for it if I wanted […]

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Lake Sadawga

(Originally posted on September 25, 2010) This past summer during the Marlboro Music Festival season, my buddy Miles and I went to a lake we had never fished before.  We knew of this lake for a couple of years at least, but we had been too busy exploring Harriman Reservoir as our primary fishing water.  Probably we go fishing on a boat about 10 times a season, and we usually get to fish for a couple of hours at a time — that isn’t really enough to explore Harriman.  We had tried a few different boat launching sites, different tackles, and different tactics there during a few Marlboro seasons…  And

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The 2010 Marlboro Season

(Originally posted on August 19, 2010) The 2010 Marlboro season has ended.  This morning, for the first time in 8+ weeks, I woke up in a room that was not Random North 7.  I’m no longer in Marlboro— and I don’t even want to think what that means to me.  I know, I’ll just have to face the harsh reality. This season was a difficult one for me.  Not only that I had heavier loads this year as head librarian, but also that especially earlier I had been always physically exhausted, probably because of the lifestyle-shift from inactive and calm one in the plaster cast before the season to very

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So I broke my wrist

(Originally posted on June 9, 2010) It has been 40 days since I broke my left wrist.  My plaster cast is near completion of its purpose.  Am I looking forward to going out of the cast?  Absolutely.  But the crazy part is that I think I may miss it a little bit. I broke my wrist when I tripped over the arm of a floor jack, shortly after I removed the muffler from my car.  My friend Banri took me to the ER, and on that day, my ordinary yet out-of-the-ordinary life of the present began. Early on, it had been an emotional roller coaster ride, with strong physical and

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Why a Bach cantata ensemble needs a conductor

(Originally posted on April 18, 2010) In December 2001, I was in Brussels visiting my good oboist friend Katy.  Thanks to her, I was able to sneak into the Flemish side of the conservatory and observe some of Mr. Sigiswald Kuijken’s baroque violin lessons.  In between those lessons he taught (all in different languages), he came to me and asked a few questions.  When he asked me what my goal was, I told him that I wanted to organize my own Bach ensemble and direct Bach cantatas regularly.  “Well, then you must be a violinist, and that explains why you are here,” and he went on, “who do you study

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My buddy Dave

(Originally posted on April 16, 2010) Today’s Dave’s birthday.  Thought I’d write about Dave, my oldest friend in the States I’m still very close to.  He now lives in a town in Kentucky across the Ohio River from Cincinnati.  Ever since he left Philadelphia for Cincinnati about 10 years ago, we had been far away from each other… but now that I’m also in the Midwest, I can get to him in just a bit more than a couple of hours driving!  I always try to stop over at his place briefly on the way back from my road trips to the East. He called me ‘Koji-man’ when we first

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Car Talk

(Originally posted on April 14, 2010) If something, a tool, an instrument or a machine, fails to work, I always try to make it work by fixing it or by finding a work-around.  It can be a challenge, but usually the process is fun.  You gather the information, and you diagnose the problem.  You see if you have the tools to fix it, and and if you do, you try to fix it.  It is important to realize how much you can and can’t do on your own, and sometimes you’d better get a professional help… but like a puzzle, the bigger the challenge is, the greater the triumphant feeling

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Donovan McNabb, my quarterback

(Originally posted on April 4, 2010) A few hours ago my buddy Dave from Cincinnati called me with the news that Donovan McNabb just got traded to the Washington Redskins.  At 9:30 PM the Eagles head coach Andy Reid held a press conference to publicly announce the trade.  You’ve got to be kidding me. There are two different emotions going around in my mind.  One is about Donovan’s destination.  Why to the ‘Skins, one of the Eagles’ conference rival teams..!?!?!?  I really do understand the business side of this.  The Eagles truly wanted him to go to the place he preferred.  I bet the ‘Skins gave the best trade offer

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Dare I talk about politics?

(Originally posted in March, 2010) US House of Representatives has passed the US Senate version of the healthcare reform bill, and the President has signed the bill into law.  If you are happy about it, I’m happy about it too!  If you are unhappy about it because it isn’t good enough — I don’t know if we ever get to a single-payer universal healthcare system (Medicare for all) in our lifetime, but it is a first decisive step toward the right direction.  Perhaps in the future, hopefully soon, we’ll get the coveted public option.  And if you are raged about the passage of the bill, it is you I’d really

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Appreciating 1/6-comma — Temperament Part III

(Originally posted in March, 2010) By now we hopefully understand that the Pythagorean temperament is really a stack of pure perfect 5ths (Pythagorean 5ths) and can bring out melodic beauty, and the temperament based on the narrow 5ths, each tampered by a quarter of a syntonic comma (mean-tone 5ths), can bring out chordal beauty.  Then what about those so-called well-temperaments like Kirnberger, Werckmeister, Vallotti and Young?  What is the 1/6-comma mean-tone that we hear about lately?  How different is that from the Vallotti or the Young temperaments? Before we get to the discussion of 1/6-Pythagorean-comma systems vs. 1/6-comma mean-tone, let’s take a look at the 1/4-comma systems.  Among those well-temperaments,

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